Technically Acceptable Ethan Iverson

Album info

Album-Release:
2023

HRA-Release:
19.01.2024

Label: Blue Note Records

Genre: Jazz

Subgenre: Contemporary Jazz

Artist: Ethan Iverson

Album including Album cover

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  • 1 Conundrum 01:31
  • 2 Victory is Assured (Alla Breve) 02:39
  • 3 Technically Acceptable 04:18
  • 4 Who Are You, Really? 03:25
  • 5 The Chicago Style 02:37
  • 6 It’s Fine to Decline 02:58
  • 7 The Way Things Are 03:50
  • 8 Killing Me Softly With His Song 03:50
  • 9 ‘Round Midnight 04:22
  • 10 The Feeling is Mutual 04:15
  • 11 Piano Sonata: Allegro Moderato 06:30
  • 12 Piano Sonata: Andante 04:10
  • 13 Piano Sonata: Rondo 04:42
  • Total Runtime 49:07

Info for Technically Acceptable



Pianist and composer Ethan Iverson has announced the January 19 release of his 2nd Blue Note album Technically Acceptable, a far-ranging new project full of twists and turns that finds Iverson at the helm of two different trios—with bass/drum teams Thomas Morgan/Kush Abadey and Simón Willson/Vinnie Sperrazza—performing a set of striking new originals plus singular new versions of Roberta Flack’s “Killing Me Softly With His Song” and Thelonious Monk’s “‘Round Midnight,” the latter featuring Rob Schwimmer on theremin. The album concludes with the recorded premiere of Iverson’s Piano Sonata which is given a tour-de-force performance by Iverson himself.

Watch Iverson, Morgan, and Abadey perform the lead single “Conundrum”—which Iverson posits as the theme song for an imaginary game show—live in the studio. The trio will be celebrating the album release at the Village Vanguard in New York City from Jan. 23-28 followed by European and U.S. tours. See below for a full list of dates.

“I’m interested in trying to wrangle these almost archaic forms in a modernist way,” Iverson says. “When I play a 12-bar blues with Thomas and Kush, it doesn’t sound like 1944 in the slightest. It sounds like 2023. But at the same time, it is a serious throwback. That’s where I connect to someone like Jaki Byard, who could play the most up-to-date creative music with Eric Dolphy or play behind a blues singer and be totally comfortable. And when he played solo or trio, it all came out at once.”

The history-spanning wealth of influences and eras that Iverson has investigated as pianist, composer and critic all emerge, in often surprising and delightful ways, throughout Technically Acceptable. In the past Iverson has used his leader dates as a way to connect with and learn from elders like Billy Hart or Jack DeJohnette, the latter who appeared on Iverson’s 2022 Blue Note debut Every Note Is True. Here he’s working solely with younger musicians who find ample space for freewheeling invention even within the concise forms of these short tunes, whose pop-like precision harkens back to his days with The Bad Plus.

Through a repertoire that alights on myriad points on the jazz and classical timelines in playful yet inventive ways, Iverson allows himself the credential that christens the album. “If I’m taking the measure of my own work: I’m on a journey, but I don’t think it’s finished yet. My first album was called School Work; maybe in another ten years I’ll create the album Flawless Masterpiece. For now, I’m Technically Acceptable.”

Ethan Iverson, piano
Thomas Morgan, bass
Kush Abadey, drums

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